To ring in the New Year, CNN's Belief Blog asked
experts in religion, faith leaders, and a secular humanist about how the
forces of faith and faithlessness will shape the world in 2012.
Here's what they told us:
1. The Republican Party will tap Mitt Romney as its presidential
nominee, and America will finally have its "Mormon moment." As
evangelicals try to figure out whether they can support a president who
practices Mormonism, the rest of us will try to figure out whether
Mormonism is a cult, a form of Christianity, or something in between.
Meanwhile, visitors to Marriott hotels will finally crack open some of
those nightstand copies of The Book of Mormon.
–Stephen Prothero, Boston University religion professor and regular CNN Belief Blog contributor
–Stephen Prothero, Boston University religion professor and regular CNN Belief Blog contributor
2. Despite all of the lessons that could have been learned from Y2K
and Harold Camping, people will still rally around the idea that
apocalyptic events are on the calendar for 2012. Some will turn to the
end-date of the 5125-year-long cycle in the Mesoamerican Long Count
calendar (closely associated with the Maya civilization) and a handful
of folks believe cataclysmic events are awaiting on December 21, 2012.
But the dates with will pass with little fanfare — except for those
profiting from the sale of gold coins, generators, and dried food that
you'd probably rather want to die than eat.
–Margaret Feinberg, author of "Hungry for God"
–Margaret Feinberg, author of "Hungry for God"
3. Continuing revolutions across the
Arab world will raise alarming questions about the fate of the remaining
Christians in the region, and will put the issue of religious
persecution squarely on the political agenda. Sizable Christian
populations now survive in only two Arab countries, Egypt and Syria,
both of which could soon be under Islamist rule. At a minimum, expect to
see inter-faith violence on the ground. In a worst case scenario, Arab
Christians could face large scale persecution, forcing millions to seek
new homes overseas. Watch too for religious persecution to be an emotive
issue in the U.S. presidential race.
– Philip Jenkins, Penn State University professor and author of "Laying Down the Sword: Why We Can't Ignore the Bible's Violent Verses"
– Philip Jenkins, Penn State University professor and author of "Laying Down the Sword: Why We Can't Ignore the Bible's Violent Verses"
4. The year will see an increase in the number of people "coming out"
as nonbelievers. Major events like the Reason Rally in March will be a
catalyst for more people to publicly declare their secular worldview.
The statements of popular celebrities George Takei and Ricky Gervais as
atheists in 2011 are just the tip of the iceberg.
–Roy Speckhardt, executive director of the American Humanist Association
–Roy Speckhardt, executive director of the American Humanist Association
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